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Location: Mothership -> UFO -> Updates -> 1999 -> Feb -> Craft Sweeps Sky For Solar System's History

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Craft Sweeps Sky For Solar System's History

From: Stig Agermose <stig.agermose@get2net.dk>
Date: Sun, 07 Feb 1999 05:24:33 GMT
Fwd Date: Sun, 07 Feb 1999 09:09:32 -0500
Subject: Craft Sweeps Sky For Solar System's History


Source: The Christian Science Monitor,

http://www.csmonitor.com:80/durable/1999/02/05/p1s5.htm

Stig

***

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1999

New Craft Sweeps Sky For Clues To Solar System's History

Stardust spacecraft launches tomorrow in first effort to bring
material from beyond the moon.

Peter N. Spotts (pspotts@pspotts@nasw.org)

Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor

**

Tomorrow, the world's most sophisticated dustpan is set to begin
a seven-year sweep through the solar system - returning in 2006
with pristine samples of the microscopic bricks that are
believed to have given rise to the planets.

The mission marks the first time scientists have reached beyond
the moon's orbit to return samples of extraterrestrial material.

Scheduled for an afternoon launch from Cape Canaveral in
Florida, the Stardust spacecraft will eventually pass near the
core of a comet, known as Wild 2, to capture material from its
coma - the cloud of cometary gas and dust that cloaks the
nucleus.

Scientists say the mission offers a unique opportunity to gain
insights into the origin of the solar system. By bringing
samples back to Earth - and analyzing them with high-tech
equipment that can't be flown in space - they hope to unlock
secrets contained within these ancient keepers of the solar
system's early history.

[Image: STARDUST: Drawing of the spacecraft, set for launch
tomorrow. It will collect interstellar dust and fly past a comet
in 2004. (NASA)]

Earlier comet flybys - of Giacobini-Zinner in 1985 and Halley in
1986 - confirmed the theory that comets are "dirty snowballs."
They formed on the frigid fringes of the solar system from a
nebula of gas and dust that also gave rise to the sun and
planets. A good deal of knowledge about comets' constituents has
been gleaned from those missions and through the use of
ground-based telescopes.

In this mission, though, scientists hope to glean more by
analyzing samples down to the level of individual atoms.

Researchers "have long sought a sample directly from a known
comet because of the unique chemical and physical information
these bodies contain," says Edward Weiler, associate
administrator for space science at the National Aeronautics and
Space Administration (NASA), which is funding the mission.

During its five-year cruise to the comet, Stardust also will
snatch samples of interstellar dust, which constantly passes
through the solar system. The dust forms through a variety of
stellar processes, and scientists expect their examination to
yield valuable clues about those processes. The relatively fresh
interstellar dust, when compared with dust samples from the
comet, could also yield insights into how these basic building
blocks changed over the past 5.5 billion years.

The effort provides an important reference point for studying
cosmic dust that shuttle missions and high-flying U-2 research
craft have returned. The rare particle of dust that isn't
incinerated as it enters Earth's atmosphere is, however, altered
by the heat.

"But most important, we don't know where it comes from," says
Donald Brownlee, a planetary scientist at the University of
Washington in Seattle and the principal investigator for the
Stardust mission.

The $165 million Stardust spacecraft uses a unique device to
capture the dust. The collector, which resembles an ice-cube
tray shaped like a tennis racket, contains cubes of aerogel - a
porous glass "cooked" much like Jell-O, then baked to draw out
the moisture. What remains is a very light, transparent material
that has been dubbed "frozen smoke."

During the cruise to the comet, aerogel tiles in the tennis
racket's "backhand" will sweep up interstellar dust. Other
samples will be analyzed by a spectrometer aboard Stardust. The
spectrometer determines a particle's composition from the ions
the particle creates when it collides with a target inside the
instrument.

When Stardust reaches Wild 2 and enters the coma, the armored
spacecraft will present the collector's "forehand" to pick up
cometary dust. In addition, the navigation camera on Stardust
will be used to try to take the first close-up shots of a
comet's nucleus, just 93 miles away.

After the samples have been collected, the tennis racket
retracts into a special shell designed to withstand the heat of
reentry into Earth's atmosphere. On Jan. 15, 2006, the craft
will fly by Earth and eject the shell, which is expected to land
on salt flats at the US military's Utah Test and Training Range
near Salt Lake City.

Although this mission marks the first time researchers have
reached for samples of extraterrestrial material from beyond the
moon's orbit, they are worried less about the samples
contaminating Earth than Earth contaminating the samples.

When the dust motes strike the aerogel tiles, they hit at speeds
30 times faster than a rifle bullet, briefly reaching
temperatures sufficient to sterilize them, says Peter Tsou, a
researcher at CalTech's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena,
Calif., who developed the collector system.

He notes that when dust is captured in the atmosphere "you don't
worry about contamination because the sample is already
contaminated. Now we're catching dust that doesn't go through
that. We have to take excruciating care not to introduce Earth
stuff into the samples."

*

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(c) Copyright 1999 The Christian Science Publishing Society.
All rights reserved.




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